We know a certain OS update will be the Mountain Lion in the room, but there was plenty of other interesting nuggets of wireless wisdom splashed around on the ‘webs these past seven days. Join Myriam Joire, Brad Molen, Joseph Volpe and Dan Seifert from MobileBurn to get your regular fix of this week’s news and rants, and geek out with us as we get ready for Mobile World Congress, now a week away! Listen in live at 5PM EST.

Consider the high-end smartphone. While you lust after those, Pantech is on the prowl, steadily adding to and improving upon its army of budget offerings in the US. It may not be as formidable a force as the Samsungs and Motorolas of the world, but the outfit is finally beginning to leave a mark. Once a complete unknown outside of Asia, the phone manufacturer is keeping itself incredibly busy on this side of the Pacific, cranking out low-cost devices for AT&T and Verizon. Now, Pantech’s focus has turned to LTE, starting with the $50 Breakout on Big Red, followed by a smartphone and tablet option on Ma Bell.

The Pantech Burst is the inaugural entry-level LTE smartphone in AT&T’s lineup, debuting at $50 with a two-year commitment. Don’t let that bargain-basement price turn you off, though — this thing’s got plenty of mojo to back it up, which makes the Burst a stark contrast to its Verizon counterpart. But what can we expect from a budget-friendly handset? Is Pantech finally pushing out a device that will help it earn a new level of respect from American consumers? We’re bursting at the seams to answer those questions and take the device for a spin after the break. (Yes, we just went there.)

Angry Birds has spawned countless ports and two sorta-sequels, but Rovio has now announced what it’s describing as its biggest launch since the original game. Angry Birds Space will be released on March 22nd, and the company has enlisted NASA and National Geographic as launch partners for the game (exactly what that entails is still unclear, though). As you can probably guess, the hook this time around will be some new physics to deal with, including zero gravity and a new “lightspeed destruction” feature, but details on the game itself otherwise remain a bit light, including any specific word on supported platforms. Rovio is apparently planning a big push at launch though, with a simultaneous rollout planned across “mobile gaming, animation, retail, and publishing.” It’s also promising to reveal more details ahead of that in early March.

It keeps growing. More downloads, more hard-to-comprehend milestones. This time, Apple’s gearing up to hit its 25 billionth app download and it’s got another $10,000 prize for the lucky soul that claims that very app. The App Store doubled its download count in the last year — and then some — so it’s got good reason to be in a celebratory mood. To enter, you can either go grab yourself an app or enter via the prize form below. $10,000 for a random download? Count us in.

It may be here a bit later than the 140-character box promised, but this fresh beta version of your favorite third-party keyboard app brings along a treat you’d been begging for. Swype’s latest gift to the early-adopting crowd brings along some much requested Ice Cream Sandwich support. And, although all you Gnex-rockin’ folks are getting what you wanted, the beta also adds other bits like accuracy improvements, add-ons with DragonGo! as well as downloadable languages for slates. We figured all that tapping’s got you fatigued, so we’re hooking you up with a clickable link to the download below.

The gang over at BGR have allegedly acquired a bootleg copy of Apple’s next mobile operating system iteration, iOS 5.1. In doing so, they have been able to confirm two rumored adds: a new unlock-to-camera action and Japanese support for Siri. In iOS 5.0, users can activate the camera from a locked device by double-tapping the home button and selecting the icon that appears. The new workflow? Wake the phone, then simply slide the lock screen toward the top of the handset — making this feature easier to use and find. The other major difference is the expansion of Siri’s vernacular — more specifically, the addition of Japanese. iOS users in The Land of the Rising Sun will soon be able to get a synthesized “konnichiwa” from their iPhone. Domo arigato, Apple.

Apple’s kitty cat-flavored OS refresh may have dominated the news this week, but it was a deluge of product reviews that kept the wheels spinning at Distro HQ. Issue 28 is one of our heftiest yet, featuring Sony’s stateside PS Vita, Ainovo’s $99 Ice Cream Sandwich tablet, Motorola’s QWERTY kin, the Droid 4, the AT&T version of Samsung’s ample Galaxy Note and LG’s fashionable Prada Phone. Shaking things up a bit, Zach Honig travels to Yokohama, Japan to bring you the biggest breakouts from the 2012 CP+ Camera and Photo Imaging Show. And, to round it all out, we’ve got a healthy helping of content you won’t see anywhere else, like Ross Rubin’s Switched On, Donald Melanson’s Recommended Reading, our Q&A with Netbooknews’ Nicole Scott and a lesson on “How to Be Happy” by cartoonist Shannon Wheeler.

Months of rumors about the HTC Endeavor (aka the One X, Edge, Ville) have layered up to provide a pretty complete (if not totally reliable) picture of the forthcoming Tegra 3-powered Android handset. There’s room for a few more brush-strokes, however, and one of MoDaCo’s tipsters is happy to paint them. We’re told the new handset will have a Super LCD display, despite earlier rumors of HTC flirting with AMOLED (again). This could be no bad thing, judging from the stunning 1280 x 720 panel on the Rezound, but the Endeavor is expected to have a larger 4.7-inch screen and hence a slightly lower pixel density. The thinness of the Endeavor’s chassis will reportedly be a major selling point, as will be the 32GB of onboard memory that will come as standard. However, this storage won’t be expandable — the tipster says there’s no microSD on the back, just a microSIM slot and an 1800mAh battery that may or may not be removable. Again, the provenance of these reports is unknown, but MoDaCo’s reports have so far tallied closely with what we saw in a leaked Endeavor ROM. Assuming it’s all accurate, will it be enough to give HTC the differentiating leg-up it so badly needs? We’re not sure, but we do know that more Beats Audio or a music streaming service won’t cut it.

Stanford researcher Jonathan Mayer has discovered a curious Safari loophole that allows Google to track a user’s browsing activity via cookie-laced web ads. As it turns out, Apple’s browser normally accepts cookies from sites that a user visits, but automatically blocks them from third-party advertisers. As Mayer found out, though, advertisers can still circumvent this filter by enticing users to interact with ads in different ways. In the case of Google, the search giant embedded a “+1″ button on ads produced with its DoubleClick technology, as part of an opt-in feature for Google+ users. If a user was logged in to Google+ and had agreed to see +1 ad displays, he or she would have a cookie planted on their device, thanks to a system that sent invisible forms from Apple computers or iPhones. This made it seem as if a user actually submitted the form intentionally, thereby convincing Safari to allow cookies. These cookies were only temporary, with shelf lives of up to 24 hours, but they could open the door for many more, since Safari allows sites to plant them after having received access to install at least one.

After the Wall Street Journal notified Google of this loophole, the company promptly disabled it and duly apologized, adding that it didn’t realize that its +1 system would plant tracking cookies on a user’s device. “We didn’t anticipate that this would happen, and we have now started removing these advertising cookies from Safari browsers,” Google’s Rachel Whetstone explained. “It’s important to stress that, just as on other browsers, these advertising cookies do not collect personal information.” An Apple spokesperson, meanwhile, issued the following statement: “We are aware that some third parties are circumventing Safari’s privacy features and we are working to put a stop to it.”

The days of ignoring WinZip’s incessant nagging that you actually pay its registration fee may be long gone, but that isn’t to say the file compressing firm hasn’t learned from your failure to pony up. WinZip, the Windows user’s go-to compression software since the early nineties, is now available on iOS — free of charge. The mobile utility will let users open Zip attachments from email, browse compressed files and extract encrypted archives. Actual compression of an iOS device’s files, however, will still need to be done on a desktop computer.